Surgical intensive care unit (SICU) patients need

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1 The Effects of Small-Dose Ketamine on Morphine Consumption in Surgical Intensive Care Unit Patients After Major Abdominal Surgery Nicolas Guillou, MD*, Michèle Tanguy, MD*, Philippe Seguin, MD*, Bernard Branger, MD, Jean-Pierre Campion, MD, and Yannick Mallédant, MD* *Surgical Intensive Care Unit, Biostatistical Unit, and Surgical Unit, Hôpital Pontchaillou, Rennes, France In a randomized, double-blinded study, we evaluated the analgesic effect of ketamine in the management of pain in a surgical intensive care unit after major abdominal surgery. Patients received morphine patientcontrolled analgesia with either placebo (Group M) or ketamine (Group K). Morphine was administered with initial loading doses of 2 mg until the visual analog scale (VAS) score was 30 and thereafter with bolus doses of 1 mg and a lockout time of 7 min. Ketamine was administered with an initial bolus of 0.5 mg/kg followed by a perfusion of 2 g kg 1 min 1 during the first 24 h and 1 g kg 1 min 1 during the following 24 h. The 4-h cumulative morphine doses were measured over 48 h. The VAS scores at rest and at mobilization were measured every 4 h during 48 h. A total of 101 patients were enrolled, and 93 were analyzed (41 in Group K and 52 in Group M). VAS scores at rest and at mobilization were similar. The cumulative consumption of morphine was significantly smaller in Group K (P 0.05). We concluded that small doses of ketamine were a valuable adjunct to opioids in surgical intensive care unit patients after major abdominal surgery. (Anesth Analg 2003;97:843 7) Surgical intensive care unit (SICU) patients need effective and sustained pain relief without significant side effects, and IV morphine alone is not always successful in this context. Indeed, the nociceptive inputs of patients in the SICU have additional sources and severities beyond those created by tissue injuries. Pathologic pain states, mainly hyperalgesia and allodynia, can be induced. As a consequence, morphine may be less effective despite larger consumption. This tolerance to morphine is an early process favored by a paradoxical nociceptive stimulation; two studies have implicated N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors in these phenomena (1,2). The anesthetic and analgesic effects of ketamine were first described 30 yr ago, but its use as an anesthetic has declined. However, because of research showing that NMDA receptors have a fundamental role as gates of perception, ketamine was reconsidered for clinical use. Indeed, ketamine is the most potent NMDA receptor inhibitor available, and it binds to a specific phencyclidine site in the NMDA receptor-gated channel, mainly when the channels are in the open activated state (3). Because NMDA receptors are also implicated in the development of tolerance to opioids, the vicious circle between pathologic pain and tolerance to opioids might be stopped with ketamine (1,4). With subanesthetic doses, a specific effect on postoperative hyperalgesia has been hypothesized (5). Previous clinical studies that have evaluated the use of ketamine in pain management have been limited to patients with uncomplicated postoperative courses after planned surgeries (6 15). Moreover, the routes and timing of administration have varied, and the results are controversial (6 15). No data are available about the use of ketamine for pain relief in the SICU. This prospective, randomized clinical trial was designed to determine whether the addition of small-dose ketamine could reduce the consumption of morphine and create fewer adverse effects in patients treated in the SICU after major abdominal surgery. Accepted for publication April 23, Address correspondence and reprint requests to Yannick Mallédant, MD, Service d Anesthésie-Réanimation Chirurgicale 1, Hôpital Pontchaillou, 2 rue Henri le Guilloux, Rennes Cedex 9, France. Address to yannick.malledant@chu-rennes.fr. DOI: /01.ANE Methods The protocol was approved by the IRB for human research of our hospital (Comité Consultatif de Protection des Personnes dans la Recherche Biomédicale 2003 by the International Anesthesia Research Society /03 Anesth Analg 2003;97:

2 844 CRITICAL CARE AND TRAUMA GUILLOU ET AL. ANESTH ANALG ANALGESIC EFFECT OF KETAMINE 2003;97:843 7 de Rennes). The study was prospective, randomized, and double-blinded and was performed on two parallel groups in the SICU of a university hospital. Informed consent was obtained from each patient. Adults older than 18 yr were included if they were scheduled to have major abdominal surgery and postoperative management and ventilation in a SICU. Pregnant women and patients who had severe cardiovascular disorders (ejection fraction 30%) or renal insufficiency (creatinine clearance 30 ml/min), or who were unable to understand the use of patientcontrolled analgesia (PCA), were not included. The following data were recorded at inclusion: 1) general characteristics (age and sex), 2) type of surgery, 3) the dose of sufentanil used during surgery, and 4) severity as assessed by the Simplified Acute Physiology Score II. The following variables were assessed: the 4-h cumulative morphine doses over the 48-h period; the visual analog scale (VAS) score (16) at rest and at mobilization, measured by a blinded observer every 4 h; and the Ramsay score for sedation. The occurrence of side effects (nausea, hallucination, confusion, and itching) was also measured. After inclusion criteria were checked and informed consent was obtained, patients were instructed before surgery on the use of PCA and the VAS. Each patient was premedicated with oral midazolam 90 min before the operation. General anesthesia was induced with propofol (2 mg/kg) or thiopental (10 mg/kg). Anesthesia was maintained with nitrous oxide, isoflurane, sufentanil, and atracurium. A central venous catheter and an arterial radial catheter were inserted. Electrocardiogram, pulse oximetry, capnography, arterial blood pressure, and central venous pressure were continuously monitored. Crystalloids were infused during the surgical procedure if the central venous pressure decreased to less than 3 cm H 2 O, and packed red bloods cells were administered if the patient s hemoglobin level decreased to less than 7.0 g/dl. At the end of the procedure, no antagonists were used. After the operation, patients were treated in the SICU for at least 48 h. On admission, when the patient was awake, the nurse in charge of the patient s care presented the VAS for pain. The nurse displaced the cursor of the 100-mm horizontal line from the point no pain to the point worst pain imaginable, and the patient notified with his or her head, or hand, if possible, where the nurse should stop. The distance in millimeters was noted between no pain and the point designated by the patient. Next, participants were randomized to receive morphine PCA with either placebo (Group M) or ketamine (Group K). The PCA device contained morphine at a concentration of 1 mg/ml. All patients received initial loading doses of 2 mg of morphine until their VAS score was less than 30; they were then allowed to have bolus doses of morphine (1 mg every 7 min) without any limitation. In Group K, ketamine was administered separately with an initial bolus of 0.5 mg/kg followed by a perfusion of 2 g kg 1 min 1 during the first 24 h and 1 g kg 1 min 1 in the following 24 h. In Group M, ketamine was replaced by saline serum and was administered under the same conditions. Ketamine or placebo was administered simultaneously with the titration of morphine. A nurse not involved in the care of the patients prepared the syringes of ketamine or placebo. No additional analgesia or sedation was administered to patients during their SICU stay. Data are presented as mean sd. Statistical analysis was performed with SAS statistical software (SAS Institute, Cary, NC). Analyses were performed with the Mann-Whitney U-test (quantitative variables) and 2 tests (qualitative variables). Forty patients were required in each group to detect a 25% difference in the amount of morphine consumption at the 0.05 level of significance with a power of A P value 0.05 was considered significant. An analysis of variance (age, pathology, intraoperative opioid amount, and sex) was used to compare the cumulative dose of morphine. Results A total of 101 patients were enrolled in the study between March 1999 and March Eight patients could not be studied (six patients in Group K and two patients in Group M). Of these, four patients had inadequate data collection, two needed emergency reoperation, and two left the SICU before the completion of the study. Thus, 93 patients were included in the final results: 41 in Group K and 52 in Group M. At baseline, there was no significant difference between the two groups in age, sex, type of operation performed, dose of sufentanil used during the operation, or severity (Table 1). During the period of study, despite localized differences, VAS scores were similar at rest and at mobilization (Figs. 1 and 2), whereas morphine consumption was significantly less at all times in Group K (Fig. 3). Before the start of the study (i.e., before the administration of the morphine or ketamine), the VAS score was similar in the two groups (point T0 of Figs. 1 and 2). It is noteworthy that the reduction of morphine consumption was larger during the first hours after admission to the SICU. The mean morphine consumption at 48 h was mg in Group M and mg in Group K, and the difference in the cumulative consumption of morphine between the two groups was 22 8mg(P 0.05). The mean consumption of ketamine at 48 h was mg. The Ramsay score was not different between the two groups and was maintained between 2 and 3 during the study. The incidence of side effects was comparable in the two groups (Table 2).

3 ANESTH ANALG CRITICAL CARE AND TRAUMA GUILLOU ET AL ;97:843 7 ANALGESIC EFFECT OF KETAMINE Table 1. Demographic Data, Type of Surgery Performed, Intraoperative Dose of Sufentanil, and Severity Variable Ketamine group (n 41) Morphine group (n 52) Age (yr)* Male/female (n) 27/14 41/11 Type of surgery (%) Hepatectomy Esophageal surgery Others Intraoperative sufentanil dose ( g)* SAPS II* SAPS Simplified Acute Physiology Score. * Values are expressed as mean sd. Figure 1. Visual analog scale score at rest during the 48-h study. Black column Ketamine group; white column Morphine group; ICU intensive care unit. *P Figure 3. Cumulative postoperative patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) morphine consumption. Black column Ketamine group; white column Morphine group; ICU intensive care unit. * P Table 2. Incidence of Side Effects in the Two Groups Variable Ketamine group (n 41) Morphine group (n 52) Nausea 2 4 Confusion 2 2 Hallucinations 1 1 Hypoventilation 1 3 Pruritus 1 1 Figure 2. Visual analog scale score at mobilization during the 48-h study. Black column Ketamine group; white column Morphine group; ICU intensive care unit. *P Discussion Pain management is a critical problem in SICU patients (17,18). IV PCA with morphine is convenient. However, prolonged exposure to large doses of opioids has side effects. Our study aimed to determine whether ketamine has a significant morphine-sparing effect. The main finding of this study was that a small dose of ketamine in combination with morphine allowed a significant reduction in morphine consumption in SICU patients after major abdominal surgery. Many factors may account for this beneficial effect. SICU patients experience prolonged noxious stimuli caused by the inflammation reaction of damaged tissues and also created by the monitoring environment, therapeutic devices, and nursing care. In this context, central sensitization to pain may take place despite the use of adequate doses of opioids. The activation of NMDA receptors, marked by the development of hyperalgesia and allodynia, is critical in this evolution (1,2,19). In this context, ketamine, the most potent NMDA receptor inhibitor, has been used in the postoperative period. Stubhaug et al. (12) have shown that

4 846 CRITICAL CARE AND TRAUMA GUILLOU ET AL. ANESTH ANALG ANALGESIC EFFECT OF KETAMINE 2003;97:843 7 small doses of ketamine administered before surgery (0.5 mg/kg) and until 72 hours after surgery (2 g kg 1 min 1 during the first 24 hours and 1 g kg 1 min 1 thereafter) significantly reduce the area of punctuate hyperalgesia surrounding the surgical incision compared with adequate opioid treatment alone. A larger consumption of morphine was observed in the placebo group. Some authors have found a more frequent incidence of nausea, vomiting, and use of antiemetics in placebo groups (6,10). However, some aspects of the use of ketamine are controversial (5). Some authors advocate preemptive analgesia, and in this context the objective is to prevent a massive barrage of afferent impulses from reaching the spinal cord and causing a central sensitization (20). Others consider that an activated open state of NMDA receptors is required for an optimal effect of ketamine (3). Clinical trials can be broadly divided into those focusing on a preemptive effect and those using ketamine as a postoperative analgesic. In a nondouble-blinded study performed in patients undergoing abdominal surgery, these two strategies appeared to lead to differences in the amount of cumulative and incremental postoperative morphine, with a 40% larger opioid-sparing effect for preemptive analgesia (8). However, the amount of ketamine administered was different between the two groups (8). In our study, ketamine was started on arrival in the SICU and then administered as a continuous infusion over 48 hours. We found a 25% reduction in opioid consumption in patients who received ketamine. A 50% opioid-sparing effect was even reported by Adriaenssens et al. (6), who used a similar methodology in patients undergoing abdominal surgery. Such a discrepancy may be explained by the fact that in our study, analgesia was started regardless of VAS score; in Adriaenssens et al. s (6) study, analgesia was not administered until a VAS score of 40 was reported by the patient. Optimal dosage is another controversial area. In Adriaenssens et al. s study, the infusion rate for patients allocated randomly to receive ketamine was calculated by using a pharmacokinetic-computed simulation and was set to produce a theoretical plasma analgesic concentration of 100 ng/ml. After the administration of an initial loading dose, an infusion rate of 2.5 g kg 1 min 1 was sustained for 48 hours. The affinity of ketamine for NMDA receptors is more than an order of magnitude higher than that for -receptors and is several-fold higher than that for monoamine transporter sites or other non-nmda receptors. This suggests that the smaller the dose, the more selective the ketamine interaction with NMDA receptors. Our dosage schedule (2 g kg 1 min 1 for 24 hours and then 1 g kg 1 min 1 for another 24 hours) induces very small serum concentrations of ketamine without any sign of accumulation, such as that demonstrated by Stubhaug et al. (12). With these very small doses (i.e., 10 mg/h), a specific effect on allodynia and hyperalgia is compatible with the absence of psychotic effects. In this context of very small doses, some authors have evaluated ketamine in PCA devices (13 15). Results are contradictory, and the analysis of these studies is made difficult by differences in the preoperative and postoperative management (13 15). In our study, the profile of morphine consumption over time was as expected, i.e., an initial 50% smaller morphine consumption in Group K due to the initial loading dose of ketamine and then a sustained 25% to 30% opioid-sparing effect. We were unable to demonstrate a consistently increasing difference in morphine consumption between the two groups. Tolerance to opioids does not seem to be counterbalanced by ketamine. The activation of NMDA receptors in the central nervous system is seen as a mechanism involved in the adaptive changes underlying both tolerance to opioids and delayed hyperalgesia. It has been suggested that activation of opioid receptors leads to protein kinase C-mediated activation of NMDA receptors. Rapid development of acute opioid tolerance is well established in animals, and the amount of tolerance that results from various opioids appears similar. However, tolerance develops faster in response to short-acting analgesics such as alfentanil or remifentanil (21,22). Attenuation of the development of acute tolerance to opioids by ketamine has received specific attention (23). This property has been demonstrated in clinical and experimental models when ketamine was administered before the opioid infusion. However, in most studies, patients received alfentanil. In our study, because of the extensive abdominal surgery with an immediate postoperative SICU admission, sufentanil was administered during the surgery. Despite a stable reduction in morphine consumption, the patients in Group K showed a tendency for less pain at rest. Ketamine produced pain relief superior to that of placebo during mobilization from the supine to the sitting position; a significant level was obtained three times. Whether these differences are clinically relevant can be debated because of a low VAS score at these times (24). An objective of our study was to determine whether ketamine was able to reduce the side effects of opioids, particularly nausea. Unlike some authors who reported a beneficial effect, we did not observe any significant difference between the two analgesic regimens. As demonstrated in many studies, the incidence of psychomimetic effects and cognitive impairment was negligible at small doses. In conclusion, the administration of small doses of ketamine as an adjunct to morphine may be a valuable strategy for pain management in SICU patients. This

5 ANESTH ANALG CRITICAL CARE AND TRAUMA GUILLOU ET AL ;97:843 7 ANALGESIC EFFECT OF KETAMINE strategy may effectively circumvent some of the problems with the use of morphine. Moreover, in this context, a multimodal approach to pain control could provide increased activity against pathologic pain states. However, further investigations are warranted to determine the effect of ketamine on tolerance to opioids and to confirm a sustained action in case of prolonged exposure to opioid analgesics. References 1. Mao J, Price DD, Mayer DJ, et al. Mechanisms of hyperalgesia and morphine tolerance: a current view of their possible interactions. Pain 1995;62: Oye I. Ketamine analgesia, NMDA receptors and the gates of perception. Acta Anaesthesiol Scand 1998;42: Moberg ER, Moghaddam FK, Oye I. Tritium labelled (s)- ketamine as a ligand for the PCP site of the NMDA receptor gated channel. In: Raj P, Erdine S, Niv D, eds. Management of pain: a world perspective II. Bologna, Italy: Monduzzi Editore S.p.A., 1996: Celerier E, Rivat C, Jun Y, et al. Long-lasting hyperalgesia induced by fentanyl in rats. Anesthesiology 2000;92: Schmid RL, Sandler AN, Katz J. Use and efficacy of low-dose ketamine in the management of acute postoperative pain: a review of current techniques and outcomes. Pain 1999;82: Adriaenssens G, Vermeyen KM, Hoffmann VLH, et al. Postoperative analgesia with i.v. patient-controlled morphine: effect of adding ketamine. Br J Anaesth 1999;83: Dahl V, Ernoe PE, Steen T, et al. Does ketamine have preemptive effects in women undergoing abdominal hysterectomy procedures? Anesth Analg 2000;90: Fu ES, Miguel R, Scharf JE. Preemptive ketamine decreases postoperative narcotic requirements in patients undergoing abdominal surgery. Anesth Analg 1997;84: Ilkjaer S, Nikolajsen L, Hansen TM, et al. Effect of i.v. ketamine in combination with epidural bupivacaïne or epidural morphine on postoperative pain and wound tenderness after renal surgery. Br J Anaesth 1998;81: Javery KB, Ussery TW, Steger HG, et al. Comparison of morphine and morphine with ketamine for postoperative analgesia. Can J Anaesth 1996;43: Menigaux C, Fletcher D, Dupont X, et al. The benefits of intraoperative small-dose ketamine on postoperative pain after anterior cruciate ligament repair. Anesth Analg 2000;90: Stubhaug A, Breivik H, Eide PK, et al. Mapping of punctuate hyperalgesia around a surgical incision demonstrates that ketamine is a powerful suppressor of central sensitization to pain following surgery. Acta Anaesthesiol Scand 1997;41: Reeves M, Lindholm DE, Myles PS, et al. Adding ketamine to morphine for patient-controlled analgesia after major abdominal surgery: a double-blinded, randomized controlled trial. Anesth Analg 2001;93: Murdoch CJ, Crooks BA, Miller CD. Effect of the addition of ketamine to morphine in patient-controlled analgesia. Anesthesia 2002;57: Ünlügenç H, Gündüz M, Özalevli M, Akman H. A comparative study on the analgesic effect of tramadol, tramadol plus magnesium, and tramadol plus ketamine for postoperative pain management after major abdominal surgery. Acta Anaesthesiol Scand 2002;46: Katz J, Melzack R. Measurement of pain. Surg Clin North Am 1999;79: Novaes MA, Knobel E, Bork AM, et al. Stressors in ICU: perception of the patient, relatives and health care team. Intensive Care Med 1999;25: Desbiens NA, Wu AW, Broste SK, et al. Pain and satisfaction with pain control in seriously ill hospitalized adults: findings from the SUPPORT research investigators. Crit Care Med 1996; 24: Li J, Simone DA, Larson AA. Windup leads to characteristics of central sensitization. Pain 1999;79: Roytblat L, Korotkoruchko A, Katz J, et al. Postoperative pain: the effect of low dose ketamine in addition to general anesthesia. Anesth Analg 1993;77: Vinik RH, Kissin I. Rapid development of tolerance to analgesia during remifentanil infusion in humans. Anesth Analg 1998;86: Guignard B, Bossard AE, Coste C. Acute opioid tolerance: intraoperative remifentanil increases postoperative pain and morphine requirement. Anesthesiology 2000;93: Kissin I, Bright CA, Bradley EL, et al. The effect of ketamine on opioid-induced acute tolerance: can it explain reduction of opioid consumption with ketamine-opioid analgesic combinations? Anesth Analg 2000;91: Bodian CA, Freedman G, Hossain S, et al. The visual analog scale for pain. Anesthesiology 2001;95:

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